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Iran: Embezzlement case of 5.25 billion dollars steel plant stuns the nation

The Middle East and North Africa region's largest steel producer is Mobarakeh Steel, which is situated in the central Iranian province of Isfahan.
The Middle East and North Africa region's largest steel producer is Mobarakeh Steel, which is situated in the central Iranian province of Isfahan.
The Middle East and North Africa region’s largest steel producer is Mobarakeh Steel, which is situated in the central Iranian province of Isfahan.

 

Iran’s impoverished citizens were once again shocked by Iran’s most recent embezzlement case of 920 trillion rials, which involved the state-run Isfahan Mobarakeh Steel Company. This was approximately $5.25 billion at the time of the alleged theft.

Western nations must no longer allow Iran’s malign regime to export terrorism

If it weren't for the Belgian government overturning its own court's ruling and approving a treaty that is obviously meant to pave the way for Assadi's release in a prisoner swap, this might have inspired a similar surge in hopes for high-level accountability.
If it weren't for the Belgian government overturning its own court's ruling and approving a treaty that is obviously meant to pave the way for Assadi's release in a prisoner swap, this might have inspired a similar surge in hopes for high-level accountability.
If it weren’t for the Belgian government overturning its own court’s ruling and approving a treaty that is obviously meant to pave the way for Assadi’s release in a prisoner swap, this might have inspired a similar surge in hopes for high-level accountability.

 

Last year, Assadollah Assadi, the Iranian diplomat at the helm of a failed plot to bomb the French convention center where the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) was holding its 2018 “Free Iran World Summit,” was sentenced to 20 years in prison by a Belgian court. Serious Iranian regime critics believed that Assadi’s conviction would prompt other Western countries to demand answers from Tehran.

Iran: Would the US grant mass murderer Raisi a visa to attend the UN General Assembly?

He was one of four officials who served on the "death commission" in 1988, which served as the focal point of a nationwide massacre that claimed over 30,000 lives, the majority of them MEK members.
When it became clear that Ebrahim Raisi would be inaugurated as the new president of the Iranian regime in June 2021, expectations were outlined at the time, and that trend is very much in line with those predictions.
When it became clear that Ebrahim Raisi would be inaugurated as the new president of the Iranian regime in June 2021, expectations were outlined at the time, and that trend is very much in line with those predictions.

 

Tehran announced on August 2 that President Ebrahim Raisi would attend the UN General Assembly session in September. “The preliminary planning for the President’s attendance at the UN General Assembly session has been completed,” Ali Bahadori Jahromi said at a press conference. Following the announcement, Iranians launched the “No Visa for Raisi” campaign, urging the United States to deny Raisi a visa. They believed Raisi was a key perpetrator of mass executions of political prisoners in 1988.

Iran: Human rights violator Ebrahim Raisi has no right to speak at the UN General Assembly

In June 2021, Raisi was put in power through a phony election process after receiving the support of the regime’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
In June 2021, Raisi was put in power through a phony election process after receiving the support of the regime’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Ebrahim Raisi, the president of the Iranian regime, is expected to address the UN General Assembly after the start of its 77th session on September 13. This would, of course, require that the United States first grant him a visa to travel to New York, which would give him an inflated sense of legitimacy and show disregard for his long record of violating human rights and encouraging terrorism and extremism around the globe.

 

Iran’s disregard for human rights does not stop at its borders

Similar information about Albanian authorities’ operations against Tehran’s spies and potential terrorists in that country which also houses the People’s Mojahedin of Iran’s (PMOI/MEK) headquarters-in-exile was made public.
Similar information about Albanian authorities’ operations against Tehran’s spies and potential terrorists in that country which also houses the People’s Mojahedin of Iran’s (PMOI/MEK) headquarters-in-exile was made public.

 

Last week, a 24-year-old man who had expressed admiration for the Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) on social media appeared to be preparing to carry out the 33-year-old fatwa that called for the death of The Satanic Verses author Salman Rushdie. The incident happened just a few days after the US Department of Justice made public information about an IRGC member’s assassination attempt on John Bolton, a former US national security advisor.

Regime’s growing trend of executions and medical deprivation raises the death toll in Iranian prisons

Four prisoners were executed on Sunday in Arak Prison, where four others had already been executed on Wednesday. On August 18 and 15, one prisoner was executed in Birjand, one in Khorramabad, two in Shiraz, and one in Sari.
Four prisoners were executed on Sunday in Arak Prison, where four others had already been executed on Wednesday. On August 18 and 15, one prisoner was executed in Birjand, one in Khorramabad, two in Shiraz, and one in Sari.

 

Due to the judiciary of the Iranian regime’s propensity to arbitrary carryout and postpone death sentences, which is widely acknowledged as a form of psychological torture, two additional prisoners who were due to be executed in Arak on Sunday were instead returned to their cells at the last minute.

Iran: Protests across EU and Canada call for Raisi’s exclusion from the UN General Assembly

The protesters in Oslo denounced Raisi for his direct involvement in the massacre of over 30,000 political prisoners in the summer of 1988, the majority of whom were PMOI/MEK members and supporters.
The protesters in Oslo denounced Raisi for his direct involvement in the massacre of over 30,000 political prisoners in the summer of 1988, the majority of whom were PMOI/MEK members and supporters.

 

Freedom-loving Iranians and supporters of the People’s Mojahedin of Iran (PMOI/MEK), the Iranian opposition, held rallies in six different European nations, as well as in Ottawa and Toronto in Canada, denouncing the mullahs’ regime in charge of Iran. They also urged the U.S. administration to refuse Iranian regime President Ebrahim Raisi a visa for the upcoming annual United Nations General Assembly.

 

Women political prisoners in Iran’s prisons face abusive conditions

The prison authorities instigated and planned the beating and harassment of Ms. Mehdipour, and, as additional punishment for the alleged blasphemy charge, the authorities at Ilam Prison have barred her from having any contact with her family.
The prison authorities instigated and planned the beating and harassment of Ms. Mehdipour, and, as additional punishment for the alleged blasphemy charge, the authorities at Ilam Prison have barred her from having any contact with her family.
The prison authorities instigated and planned the beating and harassment of Ms. Mehdipour, and, as additional punishment for the alleged blasphemy charge, the authorities at Ilam Prison have barred her from having any contact with her family.

 

Khadijeh Mehdipour, a 34-year-old political prisoner, was beaten and attacked by violent criminals. On the night of Ashura, their hired help barred Khadijeh from entering her ward, forcing her to spend the night in the prison library.

Iran: MEK’s role in shining a light on the regime’s covert nuclear activities

The conference held on August 17 in Washington, focused on the nature of Iran's nuclear program, its military dimension and clandestine efforts, as well as the ongoing drive to obtain nuclear weapons.
The conference held on August 17 in Washington, focused on the nature of Iran's nuclear program, its military dimension and clandestine efforts, as well as the ongoing drive to obtain nuclear weapons.
The conference held on August 17 in Washington, focused on the nature of Iran’s nuclear program, its military dimension and clandestine efforts, as well as the ongoing drive to obtain nuclear weapons.

 

Several senior US politicians discussed the impact of the Iranian opposition coalition National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) ground-breaking revelations on August 14, 2002, in revealing to the world for the first time two sites of the Iranian regime’s nuclear weapons program in Natanz and Arak.

Iran: The brave women of Shahr-e Kord at the forefront of Iran protests for water

The courageous women of Shahr-e Kord were at the forefront of the protests.
The courageous women of Shahr-e Kord were at the forefront of the protests.
The courageous women of Shahr-e Kord were at the forefront of the protests.

 

The people of Shahr-e Kord took to the streets, On Tuesday, August 16, 2022, to protest the city’s lack of water for more than a week during the summer heat. People do not even have access to drinking water. The courageous women of Shahr-e Kord were at the forefront of the protests.